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toonartist β€” Yellow Ocean Ranger

Published: 2013-09-15 01:38:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 1633; Favourites: 24; Downloads: 0
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Description The younger sister of Ocean Green, she acts as the adventurer, physically traversing through areas that have possible clues as to where Atlantis is located and where the sibling's father could have gone. She's the first to volunteer to go into the unknown for the team.

When the ocean powers are released, she is the second person to get them. Her aquatic companion is the Dolphin. Also pictured in the image is one of the aquatic aides that help out the Oceangers, this one being the Electric Eel. It turns into an electrified whip that is mainly used by Yellow.

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Comments: 9

pawcanada [2013-10-18 13:39:50 +0000 UTC]

I like the design of the whip, particularly the segmented design and the very end of it. The pose itself is nicely done, especially the way the gun is pointing at the viewer. It's something I've not really mastered yet so kudos on getting it right there.

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toonartist In reply to pawcanada [2014-03-06 17:49:56 +0000 UTC]

I first drew Green and since Yellow and Green are siblings, I thought the same gun point would help show that. Guns or anything straight-lined are a pain for me. I hate busting out rulers and trying to make them look just right, so I'm happy with the overall results.

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pawcanada In reply to toonartist [2014-04-06 19:32:55 +0000 UTC]

I never noticed that until you mentioned it. That's a nice touch.

I know exactly how you feel. I hate trying to draw straight lines in general, regardless of whether it's for work or art. I always find them to be a pain and if I'm drawing on a whiteboard for work I always seem to let the ruler slip and smudge or wipe off my line.

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toonartist In reply to pawcanada [2014-04-17 13:52:36 +0000 UTC]

On a slightly random side note, I recall one of my art classes asking us to buy a yardstick for a drawing course and they asked us to buy one that was meant for industrial use. When I brought it into class, we had to tape up the thing to 'prevent' it from sliding, which never worked that well and it was mainly used for being a straight edge to tear paper into smaller sections. The crappy thing about that was we had to find a flat surface large enough to lay the paper down and we had to lean on the ruler to avoid it from moving and tear the paper in a certain way to make the decent tear. It looks ridiculous to perform a paper tear that way!

Yeah, I despise rulers of any form...

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pawcanada In reply to toonartist [2014-04-23 22:18:03 +0000 UTC]

That sounds like an overly complicated way of tearing/cutting paper! I remember in school we had this simple contraption - upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia… . Now maybe the paper you were using would be too big for that but assuming it's not, I fail to see why you couldn't just use that, unless it was intended for you to cut the paper out of class as well, when you wouldn't necessarily have access to such a thing.

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toonartist In reply to pawcanada [2014-05-08 15:15:21 +0000 UTC]

Sad thing is we had a paper cutter, it was that the teacher wanted to have the deckle edge to it (torn look) and to make our lives more miserable, seeing as we had to pay for the paper out of pocket and trust me when I say several students destroyed paper this way.

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pawcanada In reply to toonartist [2014-05-20 21:50:43 +0000 UTC]

I can understand and appreciate the intention, i.e. creating a torn look to it, which I gathered was to give it a realistic and weathered look. However if it's coming out of the people's pocket then is it really fair to make them do something that could in turn ruin the piece? Seems like an unfair decision.

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toonartist In reply to pawcanada [2014-05-29 16:13:35 +0000 UTC]

To be fair, they did offer us a very limited supply of paper, including a gray Stonehedge paper that I proudly took over (people wanted the various white paper, so that meant they were allotted x amount of sheets from the professor and then would have to spend $ to get more), because nobody wanted it and I had access to several sheets. There were the students who had no real hands on skills, so would absolutely obliterate the paper and go through sheets like you wouldn't believe. It was annoying that the professors would complain about not having enough in the budget to afford enough paper. It's not like we were paying enough for our schooling, so what's a hundred dollars more out of pocket? Jeez...

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pawcanada In reply to toonartist [2014-08-31 21:00:36 +0000 UTC]

I think it's great you took advantage of the under used and over looked supplies. I'm surprised the fact people kept wrecking the white paper, which in turn made it quite rare, didn't do what you did to try and balance out the supplies a little more.

And as for the cost of supplies as well as you're studies, it remindes me of a comic I saw somewhere where a normally $30 book is marked up to $80 as it's the "student" edition. Granted I rarely used the books I forked out for (something I regret doing but hey ho), but considering this is a time when kids are meant to be scraping by on the bare minimum - especially here in England where the drinking age is eighteen, which also happens to be when kids go off to University - you'd think they'd want to help the students save money and spend it wisely.

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